Impact of the IFRS on taxable income
Disclaimer
We do not guarantee the accuracy of this copy of the CRA website.
Scraped Page Content
Impact of the IFRS on taxable income
The Income Tax Act does not specify that financial statements must be prepared following any particular type of accounting principles or standards to determine profit.
As the Supreme Court of Canada stated in Canderel Ltd v The Queen 98 DTC 6100, the determination of profit is a question of law. When determining profit, the taxpayer is free to adopt any method which is not inconsistent with:
- the provisions of the Income Tax Act;
- established case law principles or "rules of law"; and
- well-accepted business principles.
Well-accepted business principles, which include but are not limited to the form codification found in generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), are not rules of law but interpretive aids.
The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) considers financial statements prepared under International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) to be an acceptable starting point for computing taxable income. As well, all references to GAAP in CRA documents or tax legislation can be interpreted as IFRS for those entities that report under IFRS.
The CRA expects taxpayers to apply IFRS on a consistent basis to all income tax filing and all years.
- Date modified:
- 2017-02-21